@ThePhD maybe it's the stuff<int*> case? it becomes stuff(int * const & thing), not stuff(const int*&thing)I believe, because by the time the type gets put into T, it's already a pointer type, so the const in the function definition makes it a const pointer, not pointer to const
Ahh, my damned compiler say it doesn't see the objects (global objects) from all of my classes. What could possibly be wrong! I think I'm going to try a reboot
You essentially wrap Action around your delegate and pass that to the BeginInvoke of the target form (note that in my code, the this pointer is implied on InvokeRequired and BeginInvoke
//DoProcessing of ClassTwo void ClassTwo::DoProcessing(void) { int i; for (i=0;i<10000;i++) { this->textBox1->SetText("ABC"); } } //DoProcessing of ClassTwo void ClassTwo::DoProcessing(void) { int i; for (i=0;i<10000;i++) { this->textBox1->SetText("ABC"); } } error C2039: 'SetText' : is not a member of 'System::Windows::Forms::TextBox'
I have an idea about passing paramaters and objects to the delegate function but My problem is accessing the delegate or invoking from a differring class
I just don't understand how to call the method of settext from classTwo
I think that cokkapsing works well for most the them, but the stared message list would probably be nicer if it could still be scrolled, as there are often messages you want to read, not just the top few — thecoshman4 mins ago
> I think that collapsing works well for most the them, but the starred message list would probably be nicer if it could still be scrolled, as there are often messages you want to read, not just the top few
Since I've never written a GreaseMonkey script before, I borrowed heavily from this script and basically played around with it until I got what I wanted. So credit to them for helping me get there.
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I don't like having my chat window fill the full monitor, but I found that with my pre...
I have been working in java for a while now, and want to learn how c++ works when it comes to compilation and executed.
I was wondering if there is a way to convert compiled c++ class into .class files in java and vice versa. I am interested in a single format that can be used both by java code ...
My monitor is showing vertical dotted lines. They are 1 cm apart and can only be seen when looking closely. I wonder if it is a defect or by design. I've only recently started noticing it and I've had the monitor for 2 years.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Hm. My monitor is 2.5 years old but I have "apple care" which extends my warranty to 3 years. I just feel reluctant to have it repaired because I don't have a second computer to fall back on. Perhaps it's time to finally buy that laptop.
@StackedCrooked Why don't you buy that second monitor instead? It would work as a fallback while that one is repaired, and then work as a second big one when the first one comes back repaired.
In my C++ application, I have a png image's color in terms of Red, Green, Blue values. I have stored these values in three integers.
How to convert RGB values into the equivalent hexadecimal value?
Example of that like in this format 0x1906
EDIT: I will save the format as GLuint.
sudo reboot [sudo] password for me: sudo: unable to open /var/lib/sudo/me/0: Read-only file system sudo: unable to execute /sbin/reboot: Input/output error
sudo mount -n -o remount,rw / [sudo] password for me: sudo: unable to open /var/lib/sudo/me/0: Read-only file system mount: cannot remount block device /dev/sda1 read-write, is write-protected
@R.MartinhoFernandes if you have stateful coroutines, recursion should be a given, right? I mean, unless they design it in a freakish way with shared (thread)global state, which would just be evil
> Code executed by coroutine must not prevent the propagation of the boost::coroutines::detail::forced_unwind exception. Absorbing that exception will cause stack unwinding to fail. Thus, any code that catches all exceptions must re-throw the pending exception.